Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Offwidth bouldering. “Why would you want to do that?”
Dyan asked me. “Well, its fun. Kind of…” I answered, but inside I knew
that answer was far from sufficient. Many rock climbers loathe
offwidths, the dreaded spectrum of crack climbing too wide for fist
jamming, but too small to get in and chimney. They can be painful,
tedious, and quite frustrating, especially to a generation of climbers
bred on face climbing and splitter cracks.

For me, this recent
fascination with the wide has come from a goal of being a well-rounded
climber. My first encounter with hard offwidths came in 2004, where a
co-worker on an Outward Bound rock course in Vedauwoo, WY offered to
belay me an a 5.11a. Since I was climbing 12a sport routes and 11
cracks in Indian Creek, I thought I had a chance. I was wrong. After
aiding the 30 feet to get to the anchor and set up a toprope, several of
us worked on the crack for an hour or so, much to the amusement of our
students. It was an experience in pain and frustration, of not even
remotely knowing how to climb it. Needlesss to say, offwidths got put
on the back burner.

As Shunryu Suzuki writes in his book Zen
Mind, Beginners Mind, “In the beginner’s mind there are many
possibilities. In the expert’s, there are few.” Fast-forward to
September 2008, Vedauwoo. I was ready to begin the learning process.
After seeing several articles and lots of pictures of climbers like Bob
Scarpelli, Pamela Pack, and Justin Edl offwidth bouldering in the ‘Voo, a
friend and I decided to head there and try our hand at the “Dark Arts”,
as he called it. We thought learning techniques a few feet off the
ground would be safer, lacking the time and commitment of being on a
rope. Two weeks, several rolls of tape, and one pair of Carhartts
later, we felt like we had opened a whole new door of knowledge. We
were rank beginners, despite our collective 25 years of climbing
experience, and that may have been one of the most powerful experiences
of my climbing career. Frustrating? Absolutely - but incredibly
rewarding. It was just the beginning.

Winter 2009, Red Rock
Canyon. I’m far from Vedauwoo, in the face-climbing mecca of Red Rock,
but the desire to learn is still there. While there are a handful of
offwidth routes here, it is still difficult to find partners for them,
so I’ve back looking at the boulders. Between the excessively
chalked-up, over-hyped crimp ladders, I’m seeing lines. Some new, some
old. Maybe Joe Herbst, 70’s Red Rock pioneer and offwidth Jedi Master,
played on them at some time. Maybe not. Most are new-school offwidths,
overhanging cracks and roof cracks, that use Leavittation, (a
hand-stacking/leg-locking technique developed by CA climbers Randy
Leavitt and Tony Yaniro) to ascend them. In any case, they provide more
great learning opportunities – a place to be a beginner once again.

The
following pictures are from the problem Born to Bleed (5.10+ V2), Red
Rock Canyon. FA – Scott Massey, 12/09. In the Vedauwoo tradition,
crack boulder problems are given a YDS grade and a V-grade, so I decided
to stick with that. The name is a reference to a song I was listening
to at the time I was working it, as well as the result of two days of
trying this roof crack without tape gloves. The rock is somewhat
abrasive (90 grit or so…), and hanging off hand-fist stacks will test
anyone’s pain tolerance. I finally unlocked the crux sequence on my
sixth day of working it. The movement is actually quite fun, and very
cerebral.

Catalog Request and E-newsletter

Guest Map

Warning

Climbing, skiing and mountaineering are dangerous sports. When you undertake an outdoor, backcountry, or an alpine adventure without a guide, you assume total responsibility for your decisions and wellbeing. Conditions in the mountains are constantly changing, and no guidebook or computer web blog can take the place of solid training and experience. Though this site features descriptions of roads, trails, climbing routes, and other natural features, you cannot assume that because something is described here that it has not changed since last observed or that it will be safe for you or your party.
AAI assumes no responsibility or liability for your use of the information presented in this blog. With regard to all backcountry travel and climbing, you must make your own assessments and decisions, and you assume all risks in applying them.